“List of Figures” in “The Art of Communication in a Polarized World”
Figures
Figure 3 Mural depicting Fatty Arbuckle
Figure 4 Sender-message-receiver model
Figure 5 Encoding/decoding model
Figure 6 Sign and interpretant
Figure 7 Hero 1 asks a question
Figure 9 Hero 1 thinks Hero 2 is a jerk
Figure 10 Hero 1 has had enough, and Hero 2 objects
Figure 11 Hero 2 wonders what went wrong
Figure 12 Translation as transformative substitution
Figure 13 Brecht’s judge devises the correct question for a wrong answer
Figure 14 Translation of emotion words into variations of goodthink
Figure 15 Newspeak cuts someone off from a sign’s interpretants
Figure 16 Winston hears a thrush and thinks of freedom
Figure 17 Winston tells O’Brien he will do terrible things to overcome Big Brother
Figure 18 Sacrifice and freedom take on a new meaning for Winston
Figure 19 Competing frames for understanding 2016 fires in Fort McMurray, Alberta
Figure 21 Petr Pavlenskii performs Segregation
Figure 22 Pavlenskii’s Segregation as interpreted through a psychiatric frame
Figure 23 Pavlenskii’s Segregation as an act of political protest
Figure 24 Pavlenskii’s Freedom as interpreted through a legal frame
Figure 25 Pavlenskii’s Freedom as an act of political protest
Figure 26 Percentage of people who think media are biased, as a function of political orientation
Figure 27 Ngram representing the use of the phrase “fake news,” 1900–2008
Figure 28 Google searches for “fake news,” January 2016–July 2018
Figure 30 Donald Trump’s use of the term animals interpreted through the frame of security
Figure 31 A feedback loop focusing on violence in recent events
Figure 32 A feedback loop focusing on expressions of nativist tendencies
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